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Old Man McCain and his Degenerating Principles

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bigtree Donating Member (1000+ posts)  Journal Click to send private message to this author Click to view this author's profile Click to add this author to your buddy list Click to add this author to your Ignore list Mon Aug-04-08 10:14 AM
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Old Man McCain and his Degenerating Principles
Edited on Mon Aug-04-08 11:12 AM by bigtree


"Old age and the passage of time teach all things." --Sophocles --


For many folks, aging is accompanied by wisdom and the understandings that they've gained over their time on the planet. Growing old can be wonderful and inspiring -- both for those who are maturing, and also for those who find benefit in the sharing and reliance of their elders' life experiences.

John McCain has certainly aged in his time in public office. He managed to distinguish himself in his military service in his early adulthood, and he sought to make a difference as a national legislator in the lives of the Americans he dedicated his life and livelihood to in Vietnam. He's had many impressive triumphs and several landmark accomplishments during his career in Congress, but there is a great deal of evidence that the Arizona senator has forgotten the lessons of his past and has been determined to ignore the consequences of events and actions which he had once used to direct his political compass.

Putting aside, for a moment, the most influential event of his life -- his heroic conduct as a POW during the Vietnam War -- the most defining debacle of his public career has to be his confessed role in the Keating 5 scandal. Despite his knee-jerk response to the public discovering that his hand had absentmindedly dipped into the corporate influence cookie jar, and all of the subsequent railing against special interests and the strident efforts to reform the political money game that he orchestrated to try and remove the stink of corruption from his own office, McCain has continued to advantage himself of corporate benefactors as if his conduct is above reproach.

It's an easy reflex for the older, wiser McCain to brush off stories like the one which surfaced earlier this year of a frantic effort by his staff to block access to the senator of a forty-year old female lobbyist. Staffers were convinced the woman was involved romantically with the senator and were shocked to learn that McCain had written letters to government regulators on behalf of her corporate client.

Despite all of McCain's talk about the evils of corporate influence, he continued to exploit free travel on corporate charter flights from people who were lobbying him after the Keating scandal, including, as the NYT reported, corporatist executives like Rupert Murdoch, Michael R. Bloomberg and Lowell W. Paxson, McCain's 40-year old lady-friend lobbyist's client.

From his "chief political adviser," former RNC hack Charlie Black, to Bush loyalist and lobbyist, Ed Gillespie, Sen. McCain has surrounded his campaign with some of the most pernicious corporate influences of the Bush term, and beyond. Progressive Media USA Research, in May found that "McCain has had at least 133 lobbyists running his campaign and raising money for him." In fact, Sen. McCain has even chosen a corporate lobbyist to run his VP search.

Political amnesia has overtaken Sen. McCain. He flipped to support the Bush tax cuts after denouncing them. Other flips:

-In 1999, McCain said he backed Roe v. Wade, but by 2007 he called it a "bad decision" in order to attract pro-life votes.
-McCain reversed his earlier opposition to waterboarding torture this year.
-In a huge flip to attract conservative votes this year, McCain announced he would oppose his own immigration bill.
-He said gay's and lesbians should be allowed to marry, then he said the opposite.
-And what happened in 2007 to make him completely walk away his support for the campaign reform legislation that bears his name?

It would be too much of a presumption to suppose that it is McCain's age which has caused him to ignore his own past wisdom on these key issues. Perhaps it's legitimate, though, to suggest that the 71-year old now sees this election as his very last chance to achieve the power and position of the presidency which has eluded him in his earlier attempts to get Americans to vote him in. It may be, as well, that the seductive lure of the power and influence of the highest office in the land has trumped and overtaken any dedication to the principles that McCain postured and pretended were paramount to his exercise of legislative authority.

McCain's saddest reversals have come in his early assurances that our military would "win" in Iraq. “We will win this conflict. We will win it easily," McCain had said at the beginning of the invasion. After nearly four years into the occupation, he insisted that he knew the mission there would be "long and hard and tough.”

More importantly, there's a damning attitude of bravado from Sen. McCain toward the Iraq occupation even though the mission has sacrificed the lives of over 4000 of our nation's defenders. The bravado is, at first look, unseemly for someone who bore so much of the burden and consequence of Nixon's blundering military expansionism in Vietnam. Where is the concern from McCain for the burden and consequence of Bush's blundering imperialism in the senator's declaration that our troops could remain in Iraq for "100 years" or more?

It's apparent that John McCain has settled on the most dangerous conclusion he could adopt concerning the correctness and prudence of our nation's military involvement in Vietnam. McCain is satisfied to believe that our military forces' ability to seize territory by force in Iraq and hold it is enough of a "success" to continue the destabilizing occupation.

To McCain, the "surge" of military repression against resisting Iraqi communities represented a validation of his grousing at the beginning of the invasion that Rumsfeld didn't mobilize enough troops to successfully cow the Iraqis into accepting the overthrow and takeover of their country.

With the escalation of force -- it's assaults and the aftermath -- there's now a narrative of massive U.S. and Iraqi deaths, which occurred throughout the military build-up and was a predictable result of the stepped-up military activity, for McCain to point to as his justifying emergency. Then, there's the narrative that Bush's war hawks can promote of relative calm and order (that's actually the result of the U.S. attacks on the resisting Iraqi communities subsiding). Public, pay no mind to the fact that Bush's and McCain's diverting, opportunistic invasion was the pretext and the fuel for their perpetual aggression and the inevitable resistance.

For Bush, the "surge" was a reflexive defense by the lame-duck to ward off the inevitable, impending declaration of a humiliating failure in Iraq which will follow our exit, whenever in this century it finally takes place. It's a classic Cambodia-style push-off; a "decent interval" like Kissinger advised Nixon to employ to stave off criticism of their failure before the presidential election.

Kissinger, a major architect of the military aggression in Vietnam, took the view when advising Nixon on how to withdraw, that if he just left the soldiers in place and propped up the South Vietnamese government instead of pulling our troops out - giving them what was described a "decent interval" - the Nixon administration could weather the presidential election and continue to hold power. Nixon was heard on released 1972 tapes saying "South Vietnam probably would never even survive anyway."

"We also have to realize, Henry, that winning an election is terribly important," Nixon was heard telling Kissinger. "It's terribly important this year, but can we have a viable foreign policy if a year from now or two years from now, North Vietnam gobbles up South Vietnam? That's the real question."

The escalation of force in Iraq was a political ploy to roll back the 'terrorist fringe' in Iraq -- far enough for Bush to free enough soldiers to diversify his militarism, perhaps, to muckrake in Iran or Syria. But, there's much more to the administration's desperate flailing of our soldiers around Iraq than just their desire to 'win' anything there. They are locked in their own original game of seeking validation for their roles as protectors of the world after the September 11 attacks. It's their only relevant reason for being.

Wisdom hasn't followed John McCain as he's aged. If it has, it's been overtaken by his ambition to be president. The former POW has forgotten the lesson of Nixon's stubborn refusal to accept that democracy couldn't be imposed at the point of a gun. He's even allowed himself to remain indifferent to the plights of the over 20,00 detainees languishing in U.S. run prisons in the nation he imagines he's building in Iraq.

Like Bush, McCain is left to try and maintain a posture of conflict and emergency in Iraq, just to avoid the ultimate accountability for the devastating failure which will certainly blossom into it's own special chaos following any official end to the occupation. Who knows what this old man will decide is important if he gets into office; his legacy, or ours?

"Old men are dangerous: it doesn’t matter to them what is going to happen to the world," Captain Shotover tells Ellie in George Bernard Shaw's 'Heartbreak House'.

Ellie: “I should have thought nothing else mattered to old men. They can’t be very interested in what is going to happen to themselves.”
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   Replies to this thread
   K&R  Whoa_Nelly   Aug-04-08 10:40 AM   #1 
   klink  bigtree   Aug-04-08 11:45 AM   #2 
   It is obvious that he has no ambition for principle and now is principally for ambition  grantcart   Aug-04-08 06:01 PM   #3 
   It's amazing how much of even what republicans say they believe in  bigtree   Aug-04-08 08:13 PM   #4 
   McCain 'Maverick No More': Weiner and Larmett in Minneapolis Star Tribune  bigtree   Aug-04-08 11:47 PM   #5 
 
Whoa_Nelly Donating Member (1000+ posts)  Journal Click to send private message to this author Click to view this author's profile Click to add this author to your buddy list Click to add this author to your Ignore list Mon Aug-04-08 10:40 AM
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1. K&R
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bigtree Donating Member (1000+ posts)  Journal Click to send private message to this author Click to view this author's profile Click to add this author to your buddy list Click to add this author to your Ignore list Mon Aug-04-08 11:45 AM
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2. klink
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grantcart Donating Member (1000+ posts)  Journal Click to send private message to this author Click to view this author's profile Click to add this author to your buddy list Click to add this author to your Ignore list Mon Aug-04-08 06:01 PM
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3. It is obvious that he has no ambition for principle and now is principally for ambition
great post
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bigtree Donating Member (1000+ posts)  Journal Click to send private message to this author Click to view this author's profile Click to add this author to your buddy list Click to add this author to your Ignore list Mon Aug-04-08 08:13 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. It's amazing how much of even what republicans say they believe in
. . . has been thrown overboard in the past decade for their political expediency and ambition.
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bigtree Donating Member (1000+ posts)  Journal Click to send private message to this author Click to view this author's profile Click to add this author to your buddy list Click to add this author to your Ignore list Mon Aug-04-08 11:47 PM
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5. McCain 'Maverick No More': Weiner and Larmett in Minneapolis Star Tribune
WASHINGTON, Aug. 4 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- "John McCain is a maverick no more," assert national Democratic strategists and former White House and congressional senior staffers Robert Weiner and John Larmett in the title of an oped in today's Minneapolis Star Tribune. In the paper of the city where McCain will be formally named as candidate a month from now, Weiner and Larmett state, "While claiming he is different, McCain has morphed with the Bush legacy. The McCain of 2008 is not the 'maverick' or 'independent' brand of 2000."

Weiner and Larmett assert that McCain shifted "to conform to conservative Republican thought--from immigration to allowing CIA torture to the Bush tax breaks for the rich." They argue he has changed on "gay marriage (for it, now against it), allowing rape and incest exceptions when banning abortion (now, he wants no exceptions), warrantless wiretaps (wanted president to have warrant, no longer), and holding detainees without evidence (against, now for)." The authors cite Keith Olbermann of MSNBC, who compiled 31 major instances of McCain's changing his positions.

Weiner and Larmett contend, "The only place McCain has indeed been consistent is in pressing the Iraq war. McCain believes that Barack Obama, Congress and the majority of the American people are wrong. Yet even Sen. McCain gave a very different answer in 2004 when asked what we should do if a sovereign Iraqi government asks us to leave:

'Well, if that scenario evolves then I think it's obvious that we would have to leave because -- if it was an elected government of Iraq ... I don't see how we could stay when our whole emphasis and policy has been based on turning the Iraqi government over to the Iraqi people.'

Weiner and Larmett challenge McCain's national security understanding. They remind readers, "In early April this year, McCain went walking in the heart of Baghdad, and then commented: 'There are neighborhoods in Baghdad where you and I could walk today.' But backing up that stroll were 10 armored Humvees, soldiers with automatic rifles, and two Apache attack helicopters circling overhead."

The authors continue, "To fight the real war on terror against the real Al-Qaida, we must recognize that it is very much on the rebound, stronger than it was before 9/11, but in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and 60 other countries. Osama bin Laden is still on the loose. McCain doesn't get it. He makes no mention of the unclear mission for the war in Iraq."

Weiner and Larmett conclude, "McCain has reverted to platforms of the incumbent president. As the war drags on, and millions lose their homes, retirement income and sense of national security, the McCain flight from former straight talker to conservative ideologue will firm up the legacy of Bush's failures."


article: http://www.startribune.com/opinion/commentary/26189764....
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